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Over the past two years, a historic pandemic has turned Canadian lives upside down. But the House of Commons will remain nearly identical. After the elections he called, Justin Trudeau is still at the head of a minority government.
With slightly fewer nationwide votes than that
For comparison, here is the distribution of seats in the dissolution of the House of Representatives (including the 5th
Now let’s look at the details by province, starting with Ontario. With 121 MPs, it is a key province on Canada’s political spectrum.
Compared to 2019, a slightly lower percentage of Ontarians voted for the
in the Toronto area,
We are now going to Quebec, which has 78 members. The exception is the province, which has another party: the Bloc Québécois.
In Quebec, the number of ridings won by each party remained the same. the
In Montreal and Laval, the
In Quebec, the
Head towards the Canadian prairies where the castles are located
The center of the country remains dark blue. The high density of votes
Despite the solid foundations of
Voting in Calgary
We continue west to British Columbia. At the other end of the country, 42 seats were in the running.
On the Pacific Coast, the races were close. Provincial, the percentage of votes received by
But it all happened in the Vancouver area, where
After the Pacific coast, here is the Atlantic coast. 32 seats are spread across New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador.
the
And we end with the three territories of Canada, each having a seat in the House of Commons.
In the far north of Canada
At the time the data was updated, Elections Canada reported a preliminary turnout of 62%. Of the 27,366,297 people registered on the electoral roll, a total of 16,968,960 citizens voted. Those who registered on election day are not counted.
methodology
Data was first extracted on September 21, 2021 at 5:00 a.m. and then updated on September 24, 2021 and October 7, 2021. Historical election data is for the 2019 general election or by-elections since. We present the results of the parties that received the most votes nationally.
As for the historical affiliations of the candidates, it is that at the time of the dissolution of the House of Commons, which therefore takes into account the changes in affiliations of certain members between the two general elections. In each constituency, the Independent category corresponds to the independent candidate who received the most votes. For performance reasons, the driving geometry has been simplified.
For reasons of transparency and journalistic integrity, we publish all the data used, as well as the analysis that made it possible to write this text. Click here to see everything.
Do you have public interest data that you would like to share with us? Write to nael.shiab@radio-canada.ca (PGP key).
Nael Schiab data reporter, Melanie Julien boss of desk, Franz Lamontagne to name, Mathieu St Laurent developer Martin Roy Coordinator.
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